http://www.fresnobee.com/local/story/6862175p-7799407c.html

Supreme Court pares Miranda rights 
Authorities can force the unwilling to speak, jurists say in 6-3 ruling. 
Bee News Services
(Published Wednesday, May 28, 2003, 8:49 AM)

 
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court narrowed the historic right against
self-incrimination Tuesday, ruling that police and government
investigators can force an unwilling person to talk, as long as those
admissions are not used to prosecute them.
The 6-3 opinion undercuts the well-known "Miranda warnings," in which
officers tell suspects of their right to remain silent. It appears to
allow more aggressive police questioning of reluctant witnesses in the
hope of obtaining evidence. While a witness's words cannot be used
against him in court, evidence can be.

Tuesday's decision also could prove useful to the government in the war
on terrorism. The FBI agents who fanned out across the country after the
terrorist attacks in New York and Washington mostly wanted information,
not criminal convictions.

Most immediately, however, the decision throws out part of a lawsuit
brought on behalf of a gravely wounded farmworker in Oxnard who was
questioned in a hospital emergency room by a police supervisor.

The officers who shot Oliverio Martinez in the face and back can be sued
for using excessive force, and possibly for "outrageous conduct" at the
hospital, the court said. But the justices ruled that the police
supervisor who repeatedly questioned Martinez did not violate his Fifth
Amendment rights in doing so.

Civil libertarians worried that the decision signals a retreat from the
Miranda rulings of the past. Already, the court has agreed to hear three
Miranda cases in the fall, one testing whether police can deliberately
violate the right to remain silent.

"When the court handed down Miranda (in 1966), it set out clear lines.
When you crossed the line, you violated the constitutional right," said
Charles Weisselberg, a University of California, Berkeley law professor.
"Now Miranda has become something else -- a rule of evidence, but not a
constitutional right. I fear that means it will have less respect from
police, judges and the criminal justice system."

Police advocates applauded the ruling.

"This is a good win for the law enforcement community," said Charles L.
Hobson of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation in Sacramento. "It will
be the rare case where an officer is ever held liable for questioning.
This shows that Miranda is just about excluding evidence at a trial," he
said, not about setting constitutional rules for questioning.

Since December, when the court took up the farm worker's case, the
justices have been reconsidering the reach of the Miranda decision and
the right against self-incrimination.

The Martinez case examined whether the Constitution protects a person
when he is being questioned by police, or only later at a future trial.
In past decades, the more liberal Supreme Court had said that suspects
and witnesses had a right to remain silent. The 1966 decision in Miranda
vs. Arizona held that police officers must tell people of their rights
before questioning them.

Similarly, unwillingwitnesses called before investigating committees had
the right to "plead the Fifth Amendment" and thereafter refuse to
testify.

But in Tuesday's opinion, the court majority said that the Fifth
Amendment comes into play only later, when a suspect is tried in court.

Despite a common perception, the Constitution does not bar police from
using pressure -- short of torture -- to obtain information from suspects
or witnesses, said Justice Clarence Thomas in the court's lead opinion.

"Mere compulsive questioning [does not] violate the Constitution," Thomas
said.

He dismissed the view adopted by federal judges in California that
"coercive police interrogations, absent the use of the involuntary
statements in a criminal case, violates the Fifth Amendment's
Self-Incrimination Clause."

Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Sandra
Day O'Connor agreed with Thomas. In a separate opinion, Justices David H.
Souter and Stephen G. Breyer agreed that the "core guarantee" of the
right against self-incrimination bars the use of compelled confessions in
court.

However, in one sentence,they said "outrageous conduct by the police"
still might violate a witness's constitutional right to "due process of
law."

Three others justices who sided with the Oxnard farm worker -- Justices
John Paul Stevens, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Anthony M. Kennedy -- agreed
with Souter and Breyer that police can be sued for "outrageous conduct"
during an investigation.

In a long dissent, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said the court was
abandoning a historic understanding of the Fifth Amendment.

"This is no small matter. To tell our whole legal system that, when
conducting a criminal investigation, police officers can use severe
compulsion, even torture, with no present violation of the right against
compelled self-incrimination can only diminish a celebrated provision in
the Bill of Rights," Kennedy wrote. "A Constitution survives over time
because the people share a common, historic commitment to certain simple
but fundamental principles which preserve their freedom. Today's decision
undermines one of those respected precepts."

In a separate dissent that focused on the Martinez case, Stevens called
the hospital questioning "the functional equivalent of an attempt to
obtain an involuntary confession from a prisoner by torturous methods."

The fractured ruling left lawyers uncertain about what happens next in
the Martinez case. His suit will return to a federal judge in Los
Angeles, or possibly the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Los Angeles lawyer who sued the city of Oxnard on Martinez's behalf
stressed that Tuesday's ruling does not affect the main claim that police
violated his rights by shooting him.

"The excessive force claim is ready for trial," Samuel Paz said. 

"I'm saddened they used this case to chip away at our Constitution."

Alan Wisotsky, Oxnard's lawyer, said the ruling vindicated the police
department's major contention at this stage of the case.

"I said from the beginning there is no right to silence, and I think the
court has confirmed that," he said. "The shooting itself was put on the
back burner, but that's the real issue now. We think we have a strong
case."

The two sides disagree on who was to blame for the shooting that left the
then-29-year-old Martinez paralyzed.

(Optional add end)

It was dark on the evening of Nov. 28, 1997, when two Oxnard officers
stopped to question a possible drug suspect near a row of small homes.
>From the opposite direction, Martinez rode up on his squeaky bike,
heading toward his girlfriend's house.

When he approached, an officer called for him to halt. He did so, but
when the officer grabbed for the field knife on his belt, a scuffle
ensued.

"He's got my gun," the first officer called out. A second officer then
fired five shots, hitting Martinez in the eyes and in his lower back. He
was left blind and was paralyzed below the waist.

Minutes later, Sgt. Ben Chavez, the patrol supervisor, arrived and jumped
into the ambulance. He hoped to get a statement from the dying man.

On the tape made in the emergency room, Martinez can be heard screaming
in pain.

"What happened?" Chavez asked.

"The police shot me," Martinez replied. "I am dying!"

"Ok, yes, you are dying. But tell me why you are fighting with the
police," Chavez continued. The interrogation continued off and on over 45
minutes.

Martinez survived and sued the Oxnard police for illegal arrest,
excessive use of force and the coercive interrogation in the emergency
room.

A federal judge in Los Angeles cleared the full case to go to trial.

Oxnard's lawyers challenged the claim against Chavez involving the
emergency room questioning, but the 9th Circuit agreed Martinez's
constitutional rights were violated. "No reasonable officer would believe
that an interview of an individual receiving treatment for
life-threatening injuries was constitutionally permissible," the appeals
court said.

But the Supreme Court took up Oxnard's appeal, and the Bush
administration joined the case on the city's side.

In Chavez vs. Martinez, the court reversed the 9th Circuit's ruling
allowing the Oxnard police to be held liable for violating the Fifth
Amendment.

But the appeals court will probably have to reconsider whether the
emergency room questioning is a type of outrageous conduct that is
unconstitutional.

The two sides might also settle the suit before it goes to trial.
 

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